https://www.mnn.com/lifestyle/respon...&ICID=ref_fark
I'm having trouble imbedding the link into text for some reason.
Anyway, I learned something.
https://www.mnn.com/lifestyle/respon...&ICID=ref_fark
I'm having trouble imbedding the link into text for some reason.
Anyway, I learned something.
I feed wild (and domestic) birds in my yard. In addition to suet feeders, my free range mixed flock of ducks, chickens, and guineas share their food with an assortment of wild turkeys, bluejays, cardinals, crows, pigeons, and whatever else, including squirrels. (At night, we've seen skunk, possum, and raccoon eating our cat/dog food, though not recently.) I buy 50-lb bags of cracked corn for the birds, and also give them food waste tossed from the porch. What the birds don't eat is eventually cooked by the sun and eaten by the mower. Until then, it's laying there. But I don't live in town, my neighbors are far away, and I don't care what they think about my yard. However, I never throw banana or orange peels. Nothing eats them, and they don't decay well. I don't toss paper or plastic either.
On the trail, things are different. I still don't toss banana/orange peels or paper/plastic. And I don't haul extra food to feed the animals. But I don't see an issue with tossing an apple core off trail (the sticky label goes in my trash bag). How is an apple core that I toss different from an apple or apple core in an old orchard where the trail passes? How is an apple core different from a black walnut or an acorn or hickory nut that might still be there a year from now? I don't toss crackers or noodles into the bushes, but if I brought spinach leaves, and they were too wilty to eat, I'll toss them in a heartbeat - no different from a gazillion other leaves from weeds, bushes, and trees.
I don't toss anything out of a car.
Yes. Aim for those discarding Vienna sausage cans into fire rings.
Litter is litter, organic or not. Spinach and bananas don't grow in the woods. You're potentially introducing foreign food into the diet of wildlife. What if someone took all their unwanted fruit and vegetables and threw it into your yard? Leaving no trace is leaving no trace. If your trace has to decompose for up to a year, you've left a trace. Somethings to think about.
https://www.theguardian.com/environm...tains-scotland
https://www.outsideonline.com/237130...%20the%20Trail
I'm eco-conscious and all that but I don't get too anal about discarding apple peels/cores in the woods on my long treks. If I'm lucky I'll start a backpacking trip with some fresh items---rarely bananas as they do not pack well---or tomatoes---but oranges and apples and avocados and grapes and cabbage and cantaloupe etc. If I'm really paranoid about the Vegan-Only Thought Police I'll bury my avocado pits and orange peels etc.
The much bigger problem are folks who leave sardine tins and beer cans and batteries and liquor bottles and tarps and fresh big piles of human defecations surrounded by wads of stained toilet paper. I won't start out 2019 with pics of these Piles.
Last year I watched a large group of HS kids pack up at a popular spot---Naked Ground Gap in Slickrock wilderness---and once they left I pulled "butt patrol"---looking for litter. Wow, due to laziness one of them poured out a big pot of pasta RIGHT IN CAMP. And then ran like hell. Oops. Pic below---
Last edited by Tipi Walter; 01-03-2019 at 13:51.
I used to toss organic matter, thinking it is no big deal. I don't do it anymore.
Worms like banana peels. The special kind of worms that are for vermicomposting bins. The peels take a while to decompose even so, but seem to attract the worms who then proceed to make additional worms.
That said, obviously the trail isn't a vermicomposting bin. But if you wanted to start one or grow your population of wriggles or if you have a backyard you sometimes discard produce in to as some have admitted upthread ... Don't count s out!
Orange peels, though? The dry ones make great fire starters with all that orange oil and fiber.
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I hide them inside cairns.
Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
Apple cores, no problem. Banana and orange peels, no way.
Follow slogoen on Instagram.
i've left peanut shells scattered from georgia to maine and maine to georgia. hurts nothing
love how people respond to a thread like this by first tsk tsking what others do, then proceed to justify what they themselves throw away.
if you packed it in you can damn well pack it out.
How many hikers are packing apples and bananas?
Yeah the occasional insane person packs a watermelon or 2, but that's okay.
Nobody would complain finding a wild watermelon patch on top of a bald.
Last edited by MuddyWaters; 01-03-2019 at 19:43.
In 2016 I ran into a very friendly and light-hearted flip-flopper who happened to be carrying a KA-BAR. Since he didn’t seem like the type I’d expect to see carrying a combat knife, I politely asked him what it was for. Without missing a beat he remarked “to cut up the pineapple!” and pulled a full size pineapple out of his bag which he proceeded to cut up and share with everyone at the shelter. Apparently he bought one in every town and always shared it a day or two later on trail. Made him fairly popular.
Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
The one that bothers me more than any other is pistachio shells for some reason.
I get your vehemence so here's a question---Do you therefore pack out all your urine and feces???
I've discarded my share of watermelon rinds---and only a Select Few can join the exclusive Backpacker's Watermelon Club---
TRIP 136 404-L.jpg